Emails show ‘cozy’ ties of PG&E, regulator

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Top California regulators communicated often and enthusiastically with executives at Pacific Gas & Electric Co., even offering unsolicited advice on handling the media while they presided over a case to decide how much the utility should pay for a deadly explosion in a San Francisco Bay Area suburb, according to a trove of emails released Monday.

The 7,000 pages of emails between leaders at PG&E and California Public Utilities Commission President Michael Peevey and his staff were released as the result of a lawsuit filed by the city of San Bruno.

The commission is responsible for punishing PG&E in the wake of the 2010 pipeline blast that claimed eight lives, injured dozens of people and laid waste to a suburban neighborhood — a disaster federal investigators said could have been averted.

In an April message from Peevey to Brian Cherry, PG&E’s vice president of regulatory relations, Peevey offered the executive advice about improving public relations surrounding the federal criminal indictment of the utility.

“PG&E’s decision to issue a press release last week anticipating all this only meant that the public got to read two big stories rather than one. I think this was inept,” Peevey wrote.

San Bruno officials called Monday for Peevey to step down from the commission and sent a letter to Gov. Jerry Brown asking for Peevey to be fired.

“There is a very cozy relationship between the PUC and PG&E, and the results of that cozy relationship killed eight people,” San Bruno Mayor Jim Ruane said at a news conference on the commission’s steps. The emails show “it was illegal, improper and has to change.”

The city’s attorney Britt Strottman filed two motions with the powerful state agency calling for Peevey to be removed from the proceedings regarding the utility and saying San Bruno should be penalized for the communications. The city also reserves the right to pursue the matter in state court, she said.

PG&E President Chris Johns said in a statement the company is required to communicate regularly with the commission.

“The company is committed to the highest ethical standards,” Johns said.